Li Chunyuan, who plays Shu Fei in Yanxi Strategies, exposes a group of birthday pictures in which she embraces She Shiman, the actress of Xian Fei in Yanxi Strategies.

She Shiman appeared with frame glasses, still beautiful, and they seemed to have a very good relationship. Besides She Shiman, Huang Xiaoming also appeared at the birthday party.

Holding the microphone is like a party host. Li Chunyuan also wrote: “For the first time, so many people celebrated their birthdays together. Thank you all for coming. I love this big family. I am so happy!”

In the photo, Li Chunyuan embraces She Shiman, the imperial concubine in Yanxi Strategies. She Shiman shows up with frame glasses and looks beautiful. They seem to have a very good relationship.

On January 3, Li Chunyuan, who plays Shu Fei in Yanxi Strategies, exposed a group of birthday pictures in which she embraced Shao Shiman, the imperial concubine in Yanxi Strategies.

She Shiman appeared with frame glasses, still beautiful, and they seemed to have a very good relationship. In addition to She Shiman’s presence,

Huang Xiaoming also appeared at the celebration party, holding the microphone as if the host of the party. Li Chunyuan also

wrote: “For the first time, so many people celebrated their birthdays together. Thank you all for coming. I love this big family. I am so happy!”

In the evening of the 31st, Sydney hosted a grand fireworks show in 2019. Nearly one million people and tourists watched the fireworks show live in Sydney. One billion

people watched the fireworks show live on the Internet. The fireworks show lasted about 12 minutes, bringing us a fireworks feast, but there was a big oolong. Do you know what it was?

Sydney Opera House is a landmark building in Australia. It is famous for its water-facing and open environment. Located in the north of Sydney, it is a water complex

combining theatre and hall. It is also a world-famous performing arts center.

Opera hall is mainly used in opera, ballet and dance performances. The interior is novel and gorgeous. The walls are inlaid with dark splints. The floors and ceilings are

made of boxwood and birch. The performance can have a mellow sound effect. Concert hall is the largest Hall of Sydney Opera House. It is usually used for

performing symphonies, operas, dances, pop music, jazz and other performances. On New Year’s Eve, it has become a tradition for local people to watch fireworks performances near the opera house.

This is to welcome the arrival of 2019. Shouldn’t it be 19 years of happiness? But the stone piers of the Sea-Crossing Bridge show “Happy New Year 2018”. What? Is time

reversing? What’s the special meaning of doing this? In fact, it’s not that the production team made technical mistakes.

“It’s a mistake that we spent 15 months preparing for such a big event. Let’s clarify that this year is really 2019. Let’s focus on what happened last night. Despite a flash

of lightning, there’s still no accident,” said Anna McKinnani, director of the fireworks show. Anna McKinnani also said that although the team was not “happy” about the mistake, it could only laugh at it.

The spanning fireworks show is grand and spectacular, but the Oolong incident also makes people laugh and cry. It is understood that this year’s fireworks show costs

5.78 million US dollars. We can see the importance of this event. Australia hosts a large-scale

Six younger children finally responded to the various “black material”

questioning circulated on the Internet, which he himself considered to be a personal insult. Indeed, there are too many rumors about six-year-olds on the Internet, and even a lot of black material. Six-year-old children are still nearly out of security after being black. He himself said that these black materials can not be tolerated! uuuuuuuuuuu

Recently, a six-year-old boy was interviewed by the media. He said that he could not make sarcasm or humiliate me. Now it’s all behind the scenes. We should stop there. Even now all doubts are not created by one person, but by a very bad organization. This is what someone called for.

In addition, six-year-olds also expressed the hope of realizing the real-name system on the Internet. Everyone publishes their names, contact information and opportunities for face-to-face communication with you.

The response of six-year-olds has attracted much attention again.

In the eyes of six young children, the real-name system on the Internet is a very necessary thing, so that the screen is blackened, is basically rumored. If there is doubt, it can be face-to-face communication, there is no need to spread rumors so casually.

Not to mention whether it was blackened or not, online rumors are really terrible, because nobody knows who is spreading rumors on the other side of the screen. There are also many people who bear cyber violence for no reason, which is very terrible.

And the reason why six-year-old children say that there are small groups of black themselves is mainly because there are too many black materials about him.

Now as long as you search for six-year-olds, you will find that many people summed up the speeches of six-year-olds on different occasions, saying that he relies on a paragraph to walk all over the world. Travel to the West alone is a work that can last a lifetime.

Even some netizens said that the success of Journey to the West is the joint efforts of the director and the crew, not the credit of one person, and that six young children should not dominate the limelight alone.

Everyone’s doubts make six-year-olds almost out of security for the evening festival, and the situation of being black is really very serious.

If you look carefully, you will find that some of these statements are really very unfriendly, and there are even suspicions that they are taken out of context. No wonder six younger children themselves are unwilling to do so.

Although there is no real-name system on the Internet, you should be careful when speaking. Your little words may cause great harm to others. This is a terrible situation.

After the settlement Jobs continued to court Esslinger until the designer decided to wind down his contract with Apple. That allowed frogdesign to work with NeXT at the end of 1986. Esslinger insisted on having free rein, just

as Paul Rand had. “Sometimes you have to use a big stick with Steve,” he said. Like Rand, Esslinger was an artist, so Jobs was willing to grant him indulgences he denied other mortals.

Jobs decreed that the computer should be an absolutely perfect cube, with each side exactly a foot long and every angle precisely 90 degrees. He liked cubes. They had gravitas but also the slight whiff of a toy. But the NeXT cube

was a Jobsian example of design desires trumping engineering considerations. The circuit boards, which fitted nicely into the traditional pizza-box shape, had to be reconfigured and stacked in order to nestle into a cube.

Even worse, the perfection of the cube made it hard to manufacture. Most parts that are cast in molds have angles that are slightly greater than pure 90 degrees, so that it’s easier to get them out of the mold (just as it is easier to get

a cake out of a pan that has angles slightly greater than 90 degrees). But Esslinger dictated, and Jobs enthusiastically agreed, that there would be no such “draft angles” that would ruin the purity and perfection of the cube. So

the sides had to be produced separately, using molds that cost $650,000, at a specialty machine shop in Chicago. Jobs’s passion for perfection was out of control. When he noticed a tiny line in the chassis caused by the molds,

something that any other computer maker would accept as unavoidable, he flew to Chicago and convinced the die caster to start over and do it perfectly. “Not a lot of die casters expect a celebrity to fly in,” noted one of the

engineers. Jobs also had the company buy a $150,000 sanding machine to remove all lines where the mold faces met and insisted that the magnesium

At this Dong Cheng drew out the decree he had received and showed it. His host was deeply moved. Then Dong Cheng produced the pledge. There were only six names to it, and these were Dong Cheng, Wang Zifu, Chong Ji, Wu Shi, Wu Zilan, and Ma Teng.

“Since you have a decree like this, I cannot but do my share,” said Liu Bei, and at Dong Cheng’s request he added his name and signature to the others and handed it back.

“Now let us but get three more, which will make ten, and we shall be ready to act.”

“But you must move with GREat caution and not let this get abroad,” said Liu Bei.

the two remained talking till an early hour in the morning when the visitor left.

Now in order to put Cao Cao quite off the scent that any plot against him was in proGREss, Liu Bei began to devote himself to gardening, planting vegetables, and watering them with his own hands. Guan Yu and Zhang Fei ventured to remonstrate with him for taking to such an occupation when great matters needed attention.

“the reason for this you may not know,” replied he.

And they said no more.

One day when the two brothers were absent, and Liu Bei was busy in his garden, two generals of Cao Cao, Xu Chu and Zhang Liao, with an escort came from Cao Cao, saying, “The command of the Prime Minister is that you come at once.”

“What important affair is afoot？” asked Liu Bei nervously.

“We know nothing. We were ordered to come and request your presence.”

All he could do was to follow.

When Liu Bei arrived, Cao Cao met him and laughingly said, “That is a big business you have in hand at home.”

By fourth grade Wozniak became, as he put it, one of the “electronics kids.” He had
an easier time making eye contact with a transistor than with a girl, and he developed the
chunky and stooped look of a guy who spends most of his time hunched over circuit boards.

At the same age when Jobs was puzzling over a carbon microphone that his dad couldn’t explain,
Wozniak was using transistors to build an intercom system featuring amplifiers, relays, lights,
and buzzers that connected the kids’ bedrooms of six houses in the neighborhood. And at an age when

Jobs was building Heathkits, Wozniak was assembling a transmitter and receiver from Hallicrafters,
the most sophisticated radios available.

Woz spent a lot of time at home reading his father’s electronics journals, and he became enthralled
by stories about new computers, such as the powerful ENIAC. Because Boolean algebra came naturally
to him, he marveled at how simple, rather than complex, the computers were. In eighth grade he built

a calculator that included one hundred transistors, two hundred diodes, and two hundred resistors on ten
circuit boards. It won top prize in a local contest run by the Air Force, even though the competitors
included students through twelfth grade.

Woz became more of a loner when the boys his age began going out with girls and partying,
endeavors that he found far more complex than designing circuits. “Where before I was popular
and riding bikes and everything, suddenly I was socially shut out,” he recalled. “It seemed
like nobody spoke to me for the longest time.” He found an outlet by playing juvenile pranks.
In twelfth grade he built an electronic metronome—one of those tick-tick-tick devices that keep
time in music class—and realized it sounded like a bomb. So he took the labels off some big batteries,
taped them together, and put it in a school locker; he rigged it to start ticking faster when the locker
opened. Later that day he got called to the principal’s office. He thought it was because he had won, yet again,
the school’s top math prize. Instead he was confronted by the police. The principal had been summoned when the device was
found, bravely ran onto the football field clutching it to his chest, and pulled the wires off. Woz tried and
failed to suppress his laughter. He actually got sent to the juvenile detention center, where he spent the
night. It was a memorable experience. He taught the other prisoners how to disconnect the wires leading to

the boat was too small to carry everybody,

and those unable to get on board clung to the cable, but Li Yue cut them down, and they fell into the water. They ferried over the Emperor and then sent back the boat for the others. There was a GREat scramble to get on board, and they had to chop off the fingers and hands of those who persisted in clinging to the boat. The lamentation rose to the heavens.

When they mustered on the farther bank, many were missing, only a dozen of the Emperor’s suite were left. Yang Feng found a bullock cart and transported the Emperor and Empress to Dayang. They had no food and at night sought shelter in a poor, tile-roofed house. The cottagers gave them some boiled millet but it was too coarse to be swallowed.

Next day the Emperor conferred titles on those who had protected him. Li Yue was made General Who Conquers the North, and Han Xian was appointed General Who Conquers the East.

the flight continued. Soon two officers of rank came up with the cortege, and they bowed before His Majesty with many tears. They were Imperial Guardian Yang Biao and Minister Han Rong. The Emperor and Empress lifted up their voices and wept with them.

Said Han Rong to his colleague, “the rebels have confidence in my words. You stay as guard of the Emperor, and I will take my life in my hands and try to bring about peace.”

After Han Rong had gone, the Emperor rested for a time in Yang Feng’s camp. But Yang Biao requested the Emperor to head for Anyi and make the capital there. When the train reached the town, they found it containing not a single lofty building, and the court lived in grass huts devoid even of doors. They surrounded these with a fence of thorns as a protection, and within this the Emperor held counsel with his ministers. The soldiers camped round the fence.

Now Li Yue and his fellow ruffians showed their true colors. They wielded the powers of the Emperor as they wished, and officials who offended them were beaten or abused even in the presence of the Emperor. They purposely provided thick wine and coarse food for the Emperor’s consumption. He struggled to swallow what they sent. Li Yue and Han Xian joined in recommending to the Throne the names of convicts, common soldiers, sorcerers, leeches, and such people who thus obtained official ranks.

When the rebel generals showed signs of pursuit,

Yang Feng and Dong Cheng had to play a double-edged sword. They sent to offer to discuss terms of peace with Li Jue and Guo Si； at the same time they sent a secret edict to enlist the help from the leaders of the White Wave rebels——Han Xian, Li Yue, and Hu Cai. The White Wave was a branch of the Yellow Scarves, and Li Yue was actually a brigand and had inspired rebels throughout the country. But the need for help was so desperate.

these three, being promised pardon for their faults and crimes and a grant of official rank, naturally responded to the call, and thus the loyal side was strengthened so that Hongnong was recaptured. But meanwhile Li Jue and Guo Si laid waste whatever place they reached, slaying the aged and weakly, forcing the strong to join their ranks. When going into a fight they forced these people-soldiers to the front, and they called them the “Dare-to-Die” soldiers.

Li Jue and Guo Si’s force was overwhelming. When Li Yue, the White Wave leader, approached with his army, Guo Si bade his soldiers scatter clothing and valuables along the road. The late robbers could not resist the temptation, so a scramble began. Then Guo Si’s soldiers fell upon the disordered ranks and did much damage. Yang Feng and Dong Cheng had to take the Emperor away to the north.

the enemy came very near, and the Emperor left his carriage and went on foot. Yang Feng and Dong Cheng escorted him to the bank of the Yellow River. Li Yue sought a boat to ferry him to the other side. The weather was very cold and the Emperor and Empress cuddled up close to each other shivering. They reached the river but the banks were too high, and they could not get down into the boat. So Yang Feng proposed to fasten together the horses’ bridles and lower down the Emperor slung by the waist. However, the Empress’ brother, Fu De, found some rolls of white silk from dead soldiers, and they rolled up the two imperial personages in the silk, and thus they lowered them down near the boat. Then Li Yue took up his position in the prow leaning on his sword. Fu De carried the Empress on his back into the boat.

Liu Bei bade Guan Yu check him. Next day Lu Bu came to take leave of his host.

“You, O Lord, kindly received me, but I fear your brothers and I cannot aGREe. So I will seek some other asylum.”

“General, if you go, the blame is mine. My rude brother has offended and must eventually apologize. In the meantime what think you of a temporary sojourn at the town where I was encamped for some time, Xiaopei？ The place is small and mean, but it is near, and I will see to it that you are supplied with all you need.”

Lu Bu thanked him and accepted this offer. He led his troops there and took up residence. After he had gone, Liu Bei buried his annoyance, and Zhang Fei did not again refer to the matter.

That Cao Cao had subdued the east of the Huashang Mountains has been stated before. He memorialized the Throne and was rewarded with the title of General Who Exhibits Firm Virtue and Lord of Feiting. At this time the rebellious Li Jue was commanding the court, and he had made himself Regent Marshal, and his colleague Guo Si styled himself Grand Commander. Their conduct was abominable but no one dared to criticize them.

Imperial Guardian Yang Biao and Minister Zhu Jun privately talked with Emperor Xian and said, “Cao Cao has two hundred thousand troops and many capable advisers and leaders. It would be well for the empire if he would lend his support to the imperial family and help to rid the government of this evil party.”

His Majesty wept, “I am weary of the insults and contempt of these wretches and should be very glad to have them removed.”

“I have thought of a plan to estrange Li Jue and Guo Si and so make them destroy each other. Then Cao Cao could come and cleanse the court,” said Yang Biao.

“How will you manage it？” asked the Emperor.

“Guo Si’s wife, Lady Qiong, is very jealous, and we can take advantage of her weakness to bring about a quarrel.”

So Yang Biao received instruction to act, with a secret edict to support him. Yang Biao’s wife, Lady Kai, made an excuse to visit Lady Qiong at her palace and, in the course of conversation, said “There is talk of secret liaison between the General, your husband, and the wife of Minister Li Jue. It is a GREat secret, but if Minister Li Jue knew it, he might try to harm your husband. I think you ought to have very little to do with that family.”

Lady Qiong was surprised but said, “I have wondered why he has been sleeping away from home lately, but I did not think there was anything shameful connected with it. I should never have known if you had not spoken. I must put a stop to it.”